Women process multisensory emotion expressions more efficiently than men.

Collignon, Olivier;Girard, S;Gosselin, Frédéric;Saint-Amour, D;Lassonde, Maryse;et.al.
(2009) Neuropsychologia — Vol. 48, n° 1, p. 220-225 (2010)

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Authors
  • Author
  • Girard, S
    Author
  • Gosselin, FrédéricUCLouvain
    Author
  • Saint-Amour, D
    Author
  • Lepore, FrancoUCLouvain
    Author
  • Lassonde, MaryseUCLouvain
    Author
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Abstract
Despite claims in the popular press, experiments investigating whether female are more efficient than male observers at processing expression of emotions produced inconsistent findings. In the present study, participants were asked to categorize fear and disgust expressions displayed auditorily, visually, or audio-visually. Results revealed an advantage of women in all the conditions of stimulus presentation. We also observed more nonlinear probabilistic summation in the bimodal conditions in female than male observers, indicating greater neural integration of different sensory-emotional informations. These findings indicate robust differences between genders in the multisensory perception of emotion expression.
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Citations

Collignon, O., Girard, S., Gosselin, F., Saint-Amour, D., Lepore, F., & Lassonde, M. (2009). Women process multisensory emotion expressions more efficiently than men. Neuropsychologia, 48(1), 220-225. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2009.09.007 (Original work published 2010)